Should Capital Punishment be Abolished?

The question of abolition of capital punishment has been the most debatable question and brings lots of emotion and sentiments. There are people who are in favour of abolition and there are others who try to defend capital punishment or death-penalty. As far as India is concerned, the Honourable Supreme Court of India in its 1980 judgement in Bachan Singh v. State of Punjab has given a Talisman that the death penalty should only be given in the “rarest of rare cases”. But judging the case as rarest of rare is in itself subjective and the Indian courts have had varied interpretations in various cases. There is ambiguity in the judgement from the beginning. Hence, this defence in favour of death penalty is really very poor.

Secondly, India is a party of International Convention on Civil and Political Rights that requires countries to move towards the abolition of capital punishment. However, much remains to be done as India has not yet ratified the Second Optional Protocol to the Convention and in Nov 2010, it even voted along with Saudi Arab and China in opposition to the UN resolution for a moratorium on the death penalty.

In this context, Report of Law Commission India setup in 1967, said that

Having regard… to the conditions in India, to the variety of the social upbringing of its inhabitants, to the disparity in the level of morality and education in the country, to the vastness of its area, to the diversity of its population and to the paramount need for maintaining law and order in the country at the present juncture, India cannot risk the experiment of abolition of capital punishment.

So, the general intellectual thought in this regard is against the abolition as they consider it a risk to the National Security.

However, we should also not forget that 139 countries world-wide have taken this risk and abolished capital punishment altogether.

Another reason for continuation of death penalty is the concept known as “public opinion”. However, irrational it may sound but it is the fact that cannot be ignored. In a judgment, Dhananjoy Chatterjee v State of West Bengal, that had led in 2004 to the last public hanging India has witnessed so far, the Supreme Court stated:

Imposition of appropriate punishment is the manner in which the courts respond to society’s cry for justice against the criminals. Justice demands that courts should impose punishment befitting the crime so that the courts reflect public abhorrence of the crime.

But as Arthur Chaskalson, former Chief Justice of Supreme Court of S.Africa reiterated,

If public opinion were to be decisive there would be no need for constitutional adjudication.

Now, coming to my opinion on abolition of Capital Punishment from India is concerned, I am in favour of abolition. Not because we have any legacy of non-violence, but just because we have moved much ahead of the period of renaissance and enlightenment, and we must show that not only time has passed but the ancient and medieval approach to deal with punishments has also been left behind. As Pamela Philipose has said in her essay titled Is this real justice?,

The imminent extinction of a sentient life endowed with thought and memory, linked intimately to the lives of others, is a fearsome thing.

Capital punishment should be really the fearsome thing. It is like tit-for-tat, an eye-for-an-eye and as Gandhiji said it will make the whole world blind.

P.S.:- I was having discussion elsewhere and I put forward to one of the replies:-

You will be shocked to know that as per the report of Amnesty International that more than two-thirds of the countries in the world have now abolished the death penalty in law or practice. The numbers are as follows:

So, updating my stat, 140 countries have abolished the death penalty and this number is not declining. It is increasing year after year since 1976, when Portugal abolished the death penalty for all crimes.

It is true that India had not abolished capital punishment and retained the 1861 Indian Penal Code providing for the death penalty. But it was not that this idea was not given any thought. If you must know, I would like to quote during Constituent Assembly debates, a member of Constituent Assembly while opposing an amendment demanding partial ban on capital punishment, said,

I think that with the growth of consciousness, with the development of society, the State should revise a punishment of this nature…

So, at that point we had thought that with the passage of time, we will be making changes to the nature of punishment. Why we still continue with same punishment which we do abhor? We hate the British Raj for hanging Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev and Rajguru and we hate the Raj for the hanging of Surya Sen and many such martyrs. Most of you will agree that they should not have been hanged. But if that is the case, then why we still continue with capital punishment?

P.P.S.:- This is in reply to the following:-

No I don’t agree with this. Supreme Court has already told that capital punishment should be given in the cases involving when a person encourage a child or mentally ill person to commit suicide , or when a army person wage war against own country , or when a person is found guilty of terrorist activities.
As you can see the offenses under consideration are very serious and deserve nothing but capital punishment..
It is very easy to say that capital punishment is inhumane but ask from the families of 166 people who were killed by Kasab and each and every of them will say yes to his hanging.
Who can forget kandhar hijack had we killed maulana Masood Azharpreviously it would never had occurred because hijackers demanded the release of him and when he was set free he stung us again and again in the form of Indian parliament attack and numerous killings in Kashmir.So it becomes very important that what we want : death of hundred of Innocent people or death of one person who is responsible for killing so many innocent people ??

Moreover Supreme Court has already stated that capital punishment will be given only in rarest of rare cases so if we have trust in out judiciary then we should give them the power to decide what offenses deserve capital punishment for the betterment of this society..

It is true that Gandhiji said that an eye for an eye will make the whole world blind but sometimes when a single person is taking out eyes of many innocent people it is advisable to take his eyes so that he may not turn the whole world blind !

Why are you considering capital punishment as co-terminus with the scale of justice? When we talk about our Heroes like Bhagat Singh, Surya Sen, etc. we call that hanging was the wrong thing to do, but in the view of “Imperialist” Raj, they were terrorist and murderers. Why cannot we have the same scale? Why cannot we hold ourselves to higher standards of justice than those followed by our Imperial masters? Why cannot we move towards the idea of restorative justice rather than retributive justice?

P.P.P.S:- To the above post, I got the following reply:-

do u think the consciousness has really grown?? the society has really developed??. The consciousness has to grow among the people. I never said that the countries which have not abolished death sentence have not given a thought about it. I never said that the nature of punishment need not change. I was indeed saying that death penalty should not be abolished in certain cases where the crimes tend to be very brutal. Adding to the fact that we condemn the British for hanging Bhagat singh, Raj guru etc.. will u really oppose if India decides to hang Ajmal Kasab today?? or will awarding a life imprisonment to Kasab really help in reducing the terrorism?
And also, while many countries are abolishing death sentence, India, the birth place of Mahatma Gandhi, has not yet abolished it. Is it because we don’t know the meaning of humanity??

I would like to say what Justice A K Ganguly, Honourable member of Supreme Court of India said. He termed the award of death sentence as “barbaric, anti-life, undemocratic and irresponsible” which is “legal” in the prevailing judicial system. He further said that the Constitutional guarantee of right to life cannot be subjected to “vague premises”. The vague premise in question is doctrine of the crime falling in the’rarest of rare’ category in awarding the death penalty.

The issue is not whether we know the meaning of humanity or not. The issue is whether we practice humanity or not.

For the case of Kasab, I would like to quote what Bhagat Singh said in his last petition to the Governor of Punjab,
As to the question of our fates, please allow us to say that when you have decided to put us to death, you will certainly do it. You have got the power in your hands and the power is the greatest justification in this world. We know that the maxim ‘Might is right’ serves as your guiding motto. The whole of our trial was just a proof of that. We wanted to point out that according to the verdict of your court we had waged war and were therefore war prisoners. And we claim to be treated as such, i.e., we claim to be shot dead instead of to be hanged.

The doctrine of the crime falling in the’rarest of rare’ category in awarding the death penalty is a “grey” area as its interpretation depended on individual judges. It is just another version of Might is right!

renaissance | enlightenment – reawakening – reformation

I HAVE MOVED

I like taking pictures. But I am lazy to click pictures using a DSLR. I own one but use it occasionally. The truth is that I don’t even need one. My iPhone is one of the best point and shoot cameras in the world and I simply love it. With iPhone (or any smart phone for that matter), comes the ease of portability. Portability not only terms of carrying your c […]

Last year I have worked a lot on Distributed Runtime environments specially using Spring XD. Spring XD provides a way to create Streams which can process lot of flowing data in real time. Spring XD internally uses Spring Integration for most of the processing of data. However, it is impossible for any module to handle lots of data in real time. This is handl […]

Migrating SVN Repo to Git June 24, 2016

Recently, I had to move one of my SVN repository (loans-autoloans-duedatechanges) from SVN to Git. As there was no tag or trunk and only branch (it is weird but true) it was fairly simple. Git comes with a great Git-Svn toolkit that you can use. However, there are few caveats and I will tell you how I overcame them. I started by creating a new folder on my m […]

Traceability Matrix - How important is its role in an Agile World April 2, 2016

Requirements traceability is “the ability to describe and follow the life of a requirement, in both a forwards and backwards direction (i.e., from its origins, through its development and specification, to its subsequent deployment and use, and through all periods of on-going refinement and iteration in any of these phases)” [1]. It is primarily useful for v […]

Clojure and Polish Notation March 3, 2016

Clojure is a functional programming language targeting JVM developed by Rich Hickey. It is a dialect of Lisp, which is distinctive with the use of parenthesis and Polish notation (generally referred to as Prefix notation). Clojure follows the same fully-parenthesized Polish prefix notation. It is a beautiful language. However, people get scared when they see […]

Got a new bicycle! February 27, 2016

Today in the morning Ray wanted to get out and play; he misses school when it is an off day for him from school. He wanted us to take him out but 8 am in the morning before you are even awake and in your senses. However, Priti brought out the idea that we may go to Perot Museum to which I readily agreed. At around 11 AM, we left for the Museum and went strai […]

Book Review - Go in Action by Kennedy, Ketelsen and Martin February 10, 2016

Go in Action sets out to do what other books lack. It is kind of an academic introduction to Golang, which is beneficial for developers who have academic interest in the language development and also for those who are looking for a little hand-holding in GoLang. The book will act as a comprehensive language specification for GoLang. The book starts by giving […]

Topeka KS February 9, 2016

Topeka KS was originally published by Palak Mathur at Palak Mathur on February 09, 2016.

Martin Luther King Jr. in India January 18, 2016

Since being in India, I am more convinced than ever before that the method of nonviolent resistance is the most potent weapon available to oppressed people in their struggle for justice and human dignity.” ~ Martin Luther King Jr. Martin Luther King Jr. in India was originally published by Palak Mathur at Palak Mathur on January 18, 2016. […]

We are not makers of History January 18, 2016

We are not makers of history. We are made by history. ~ Martin Luther King Jr. We are not makers of History was originally published by Palak Mathur at Palak Mathur on January 18, 2016.